Review: The Chrysalids by John Wyndham
-
- Posts: 67
- Joined: 26 Nov 2013, 21:03
- Bookshelf Size: 3
- Reviewer Page: onlinebookclub.org/reviews/by-lemming.html
- Latest Review: "Broken Land, A Brooklyn Tale" by John Biscello
Review: The Chrysalids by John Wyndham
In this novel, one thing the post nuclear apocalypse variations on human have in common is that they see their own type as the chosen people and everyone else as at best bystanders, at worst enemies. The rural society in which David Storm grows up even has its own version of scripture to back up these beliefs - declaring how many fingers and toes someone must have to be true to the image of God. In fact David's zealot father Joseph believes that the subtler the difference between a mutant and a norm, the more insidious and dangerous is the devil-made affront to God. This thinking is unfortunately true to human nature; some of the worst wars have been between those with small genetic differences - e.g., I recall reading that DNA research showed that Arabs and Jews are 'genetic brothers'.
While The Chrysalids shows the destructiveness of intolerance it doesn't seem to carry a straight "can't we all just get along?" message - in fact if you read it that way the ending is likely to come as a shock. Rather the book explores whether building a society without an "us vs. them" mentaility is even possible. For instance, David and some of his friends find that they are able to communicate telepathically, but while they express the anxiety and frustration of having to hide their difference in a society that would label them abominations, they are unanimous in their belief that one telepathic character who wants to marry a norm is signing up for the equivalent of tying herself to a "cripple". Sounds like bigotry to me.
Despite telpathy offering accelerated education and people close to him being hurt by xenophobia, David's views are also coloured by the teachings of his father - David can fire off anti-mutant sentiments by rote - so he is a complex character who seems destined to repeat some of his father's mistakes even - or especially - as an outcast.
This isn't a book that offers easy answers to the problems of groups defining themeselves based on their intolerance of other's differences, but it is full of ideas, well-written, and compelling on a "what happens next" level. I don't quite see it as a classic but it's always possible I am missing something. Maybe if the mutants' powers were as cool as those of the X-men.

- CONSTARA
- Posts: 49
- Joined: 02 Feb 2014, 02:46
- Bookshelf Size: 0
- Reviewer Page: onlinebookclub.org/reviews/by-constara.html
-
- Posts: 67
- Joined: 26 Nov 2013, 21:03
- Bookshelf Size: 3
- Reviewer Page: onlinebookclub.org/reviews/by-lemming.html
- Latest Review: "Broken Land, A Brooklyn Tale" by John Biscello
Thank you for the feedback! I think the idea of little differences between similar people leading to war is also well expressed in Gulliver's Travels with the lilliputians going to war over which end of their eggs they like to crack, and that's probably the reason Swift makes them "small" people.CONSTARA wrote:I like your reference, to intolerance! Given time, whole countries have gone to war of these 'little' differences from culture to culture. And, no mutant powers are as cool as the X-men! lol